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Microsoft Now Sponsoring Twitter Enterprise Site

Twitter has created ExecTweets, a site sponsored by Microsoft and designed to push messages, or "tweets," from executives to the general ecosystem of Twitter users. As Twitter, Facebook and other social networking solutions grow in size, they have been seeking out viable avenues for earning revenue.

Twitter announced on March 23 the launch of ExecTweets, a site sponsored by Microsoft and designed to push "tweets" from some of the nation's most prominent executives to Twitter users.

Visitors to the ExecTweets site have granular control over the industry whose executives they want to follow, as well as the option to follow particularly hot topics or most-popular executive "twitterers." For example, if a user wanted to follow Steve Case's daily "tweet," they could find him under "Most Popular."

Microsoft is sponsoring ExecTweets for an undisclosed sum. Federated Media, an advertising firm founded in 2005, built the actual site.

"There are over 100,000 C-level executives on Twitter today, but it's difficult to know how to find them, which to follow, and where the most important conversations are happening," Matthew Dipietro, director of marketing for Federated Media, wrote in a blog posting on his company's site. ExecTweets filters those conversations and then provides them to Twitter readers "all curated and aggregated into industry verticals like Healthcare, Retail, Finance and more."

Further reading

On Twitter's corporate blog, the startup took pains to demonstrate that ExecTweets was much more of an external collaboration than an internal development.

"Twitter is contacted regularly by brands interested in sponsoring innovative experiences based on topics of interest," Biz Stone, co-founder of Twitter, said in a corporate blog posting. "However, our focused commitment to Twitter itself means we don't have much time or resources to build these interesting topical experiences."

For Microsoft, ExecTweets represents one component of a larger marketing activity.

Microsoft is sponsoring ExecTweets as part of its "It's Everybody's Business" campaign, seeking to "encourage conversations within the business community," according to a company spokesperson. The company claims it's experimenting with a number of digital marketing activities over the short term.

"At the campaign's core, we want to drive a set of marketing activities that facilitate a conversation," Gayle Troberman, general manager of advertising for Microsoft, said in an e-mail. "ExecTweets is consistent with that goal-it's about finding, following and engaging in real conversations with business thought leaders."

Twitter has been integrating itself further into the enterprise life. The service now has roughly 8 million unique users, up from 1 million in 2008.